Por scriptor, per scriptor

10 Writing Tips for Using Mercury Retrograde Energy

Anne Whitaker wrote a fantastic article, Mercury – the writer’s patron symbol, last month with her thoughts on the retrograde cycle. Well the time is nigh for the next cycle of retrograde activity and Dale’s had an early visitation with the power unit in his laptop going fizzle pop and his desk top packed away in boxes. So I’m spinning about in his chair today and thought I’d revisit some tips published last year, for not just surviving, but getting the most out of the Mercury retrograde period (which starts on Sunday).

I won’t go into astrological depth as to what Mercury Rx is other than to say Mercury represents, among other things, communication, information and travel and retrograde is about things going backwards! Every day life can go a little hey wire when Mercury is retrograding.

Random synchronicity which reconnects you with important elements/people from you past.

Bunking off and relaxing

Reading trashy novels or re-reading favourite books from your past.

My absolute favourite part of Mercury Rx is the music played in shopping centres/malls and the supermarket. I have often joked with my friend Danae Sinclair these retails giants send their ambience director into my past to select the music for the three week periods of Mercury Rx. Not surprisingly, it is a great time to buy retro music. I always find the best ‘old’ music during Mercury Rx including purchasing back in January the ultimate collection of 80’s music which is the bane of my partner’s existence!

What does any of this have to do with writing though? Mercury is the patron God of writers (if you care to think like that) so there is a profound energy shift about to occur for us. Here are my ten tips for making the most of Mercury Rx as writers.

Take time to enjoy an old style of writing or a genre you no longer write in.

Use favourite songs from your past as idea prompts. Pick our favourites. Play them one at a time. Spend five minutes after each song finishes scribbling/typing a stream of consciousness inspired by the song.

Go through your archives and re-read some old stories/writing – this includes the really old, dusty crates and boxes in your garage, basement or cupboard under the stairs. If you’re truly game – go back and re-read old journals, diaries or letters.

Post an old short story to your blog to celebrate your journey as a writer. Nothing says “this is how far I’ve come” like old work. Or repost a favourite short story from your blog archive which your newer readers may not have read before.

Contact old writing colleagues or friends – even if it is just to say hello and what’s going on in your life now? Or contact a mentor from your past to say thank-you and let them know how you are going.

Revise or edit at least one first draft, current or old, before Mercury Rx finishes on the 31 May.

Search out pieces in your “unfinished folder” or wherever else you keep them and finish at least one of them before Mercury Rx finishes.

Review your book/notepad of ideas and see if any ideas now jump out at you. (I still maintain there are no bad ideas, just great ideas at the wrong time!) Is now the time to try test drive a new plot or idea?

Befriend a new character who has been hanging around trying to get your attention.

Write a list of your favourite books and add at least two of them to your reading list for the rest of the year.

While Mercury Rx can be a pain in the butt if you’re stuck on the tube on the way to or from work, you’ve had roadside assistance out to you twice in a week because your car won’t start, your computer goes AWOL and takes everything on your hard drive with it, your website disappears and your webhost tells you they have no record of you as a customer, you turn up for a meeting no one told you had been rescheduled for an hour earlier, you lose your phone and all your phone numbers, correspondence you’re waiting on doesn’t arrive, your inbox is bogged down in an influx of spam, people continually misunderstand the messages you send on your phone, tweet or post on Facebook and the fridge you buy tomorrow goes *fizzle pop* in a months time … take heart. And a big deep breathe!

As writers, it can be truly brilliant period for rediscovering aspects of our old writer-self or life, and as Anne wrote, it is a great time to have a rest. I’ve discovered, if you use the energy to your advantage it doesn’t seem to come back and bite you quite so hard in disruptive and aggrevating ways.

The dark moon is right now, with the moon renewing on the 14th. It is a great time to do some creative cleaning. Set your month’s goals or make your wishes on the 14th and watch them manifest!

Jodi Cleghorn is hoping Dale gets his computer sorted out quickly. Good luck to Dale also as he embarks on his writing adventures for Chinese Whisperings. You can hang out with Dale on his website Rough Draft until he’s be back to warm his chair next week.